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Article

Timing the Flames: Geostationary Satellite Detection of Diurnally Shifting Stubble Burning in Northwestern India

1
Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research (GESTAR) II, Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD 21251, USA
2
Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(10), 1506; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101506
Submission received: 24 February 2026 / Revised: 22 April 2026 / Accepted: 7 May 2026 / Published: 11 May 2026
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Remote Sensing)

Abstract

Post-monsoon open-field stubble burning in northwestern (NW) India—a key agricultural region known as the “breadbasket”—is a longstanding practice used to clear fields. Satellite observations spanning over two decades have revealed significant upward trends in crop production, vegetative greenness, and the frequency of post-harvest fires, with this last contributing to hazardous air quality during the peak burning season (mid-October to mid-November). Since 2022, thermal anomaly data from Aqua-MODIS and SNPP-VIIRS sensors have shown a sharp decline in reported fire events—an observation that contrasts starkly with the concurrent rise in regional aerosol loading detected from space. This apparent discrepancy became particularly pronounced in 2024–2025, prompting a closer examination using high-temporal-resolution imagery from the Advanced Meteorological Imager (AMI) on the geostationary satellite GEO-KOMPSAT-2A. These observations revealed a clear spike in fire-related signals occurring around and after 4:00 PM local time, i.e., outside the typical noon to 2:00 PM detection window of the MODIS and VIIRS. A fire detection algorithm exploiting the fire-sensitive shortwave-infrared 3.8 μm signal and its contrast to 11.2 μm infrared observations is designed to adopt AMI observations and applied to its multi-year observations (2019–2025). The resulting fire dataset unambiguously shows a gradual shift in stubble burning activity toward the late afternoon hours beginning in 2022 which is underreported by polar-orbiting satellites. The orbital drift of NASA’s MODIS sensor on the Aqua platform allows detection of some of the gradually shifting fires during afternoon hours, but the MODIS still misses a large number of fires occurring around and after 4 pm. The AMI’s relatively coarse spatial resolution (~4 km), a consequence of its slant viewing geometry over NW India, imposes inherent limitations on quantifying the full extent of fire occurrences. The operational air quality forecasting models currently assimilate satellite fire detections predominantly captured during early afternoon overpasses of the MODIS and VIIRS. The temporal shift in fire activity complicates such forecast, leading to a substantial underestimation of emissions.. Intense stubble burning and the resulting air pollution highlight the need for effective crop residue management practices for mitigating the frequency of open biomass burning and thereby reducing episodic degradation of air quality and its associated public health and economic impacts.
Keywords: post-monsoon stubble burning; northwestern India; geostationary fire observations; diurnal shift in fire activities; MODIS; VIIRS; GK2A-AMI post-monsoon stubble burning; northwestern India; geostationary fire observations; diurnal shift in fire activities; MODIS; VIIRS; GK2A-AMI

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MDPI and ACS Style

Jethva, H. Timing the Flames: Geostationary Satellite Detection of Diurnally Shifting Stubble Burning in Northwestern India. Remote Sens. 2026, 18, 1506. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101506

AMA Style

Jethva H. Timing the Flames: Geostationary Satellite Detection of Diurnally Shifting Stubble Burning in Northwestern India. Remote Sensing. 2026; 18(10):1506. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101506

Chicago/Turabian Style

Jethva, Hiren. 2026. "Timing the Flames: Geostationary Satellite Detection of Diurnally Shifting Stubble Burning in Northwestern India" Remote Sensing 18, no. 10: 1506. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101506

APA Style

Jethva, H. (2026). Timing the Flames: Geostationary Satellite Detection of Diurnally Shifting Stubble Burning in Northwestern India. Remote Sensing, 18(10), 1506. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101506

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